Minecraft: The End: An Official Minecraft Novel - book cover
Science Fiction & Fantasy
  • Publisher : Del Rey
  • Published : 31 May 2022
  • Pages : 256
  • ISBN-10 : 0399180745
  • ISBN-13 : 9780399180743
  • Language : English

Minecraft: The End: An Official Minecraft Novel

This official Minecraft novel is an epic battle for survival! When humans enter the End, a pair of endermen must decide which side they're really on.

For as long as they can remember, the twin endermen Fin and Mo have lived in the mysterious land of the End. On the outskirts of the great enderman city of Telos, they explore ancient ruins under the watchful gaze of the mighty ender dragon. They have everything they need in the end ship they call home, and know everything there is to know about their world-or so they think until the strangers from another dimension arrive.
 
The invaders are called humans, and they've come to steal artifacts and slay the ender dragon. Fin and Mo are ready to protect their home from the trespassers, but when they come face-to-face with the humans, they discover that they aren't as prepared for battle as they'd thought. Caught off guard, the twins are trapped in the middle of a war between the endermen and the humans, with the future of their home at stake.
 
Collect all of the official Minecraft novels:
Minecraft: The Island
Minecraft: The Crash
Minecraft: The Lost Journals
Minecraft: The End

And the official Minecraft companion guides:
Minecraft: The Survivors' Book of Secrets
Minecraft: Exploded Builds: Medieval Fortress
Minecraft: Guide to Exploration
Minecraft: Guide to Creative
Minecraft: Guide to the Nether & the End
Minecraft: Guide to Redstone
Minecraft: Mobestiary
Minecraft: Guide to Enchantments & Potions
Minecraft: Guide to PVP Minigames
Minecraft: Guide to Farming
Minecraft: Let's Build! Theme Park Adventure
Minecraft for Beginners
Minecraft: Let's Build! Land of Zombies
Minecraft: Maps
Minecraft: Guide to Ocean Survival

Editorial Reviews

"[Minecraft: The End is] not just a gaming companion, it's also a compelling story. It's funny, and epic, and . . . hit me right in the heart."-Pixelated Geek

Readers Top Reviews

Brownskristen bSteve
My son is 9 and really loved this book, he couldn’t put it down after starting it. He also couldn’t wait for me to order the other ones in the series. He’s advanced for his age in reading but still loves a good Minecraft book. He didn’t have any problems reading it.
BoomS
This book was a very refreshing addition to our Minecraft library. There were a couple of minor discrepancies with game mechanics, but they were easy to overlook as the story was enjoyable and engaging. That ending was...awesome! I almost hugged my book. I really hope there is a follow up like Max Brooks is doing with “The Island.” I’d love to see if 1001 works. (You’ll understand when you read it.) P.S. Grumpo was by far one of my favorite characters of any Minecraft story I’ve read, so bitter, yet sooooo loveable!
Nancy S.
Catherynne Valente has worked some magic here, creating a memorable story that packs a lot more punch than you'd expect. The writing starts out on a very simple level, but grows in complexity as the book continues until it's enough to almost break your heart. The characters grow and evolve in much the same way, a deliberate stylistic choice that is built into the storyline so subtly that you don't quite realize it's happening until near the end. The story is well enough written that you don't need to know anything about Minecraft to enjoy it, although I imagine fans of the game might enjoy it even more. Definitely worth reading for anybody who enjoys fantasy novels, video games, or both of those things together.
Jessie
My 9yo is completely engaged in the book, this is his favorite Minecraft novel so far. He gets really excited and tells me all about it! I love that he is so excited about reading, and it sounds like a great story.
Geneva Martin
So, i want you to go ahead and look up the word “masterpiece “ on the dictionary. As you can see, it says “the end minecraft novel”. Because what else is it supposed to say,all of cube kids books? Oh, right. Anyway, this book is great. It starts out-surprise, not boring! Well, its slow, but at least its achually interesting! Kinda like the silver eyes, the books split in two parts: the first half is pretty slow (but at least things happen!). But then, a human army arrives to destroy everything! Just kidding: but thats what the endermen think! However, its a small group of four kids looking for some loot. Okay, this is a spoiler alert, so just skip this part if you haven’t read it yet: the humans dont freak out at the sight of two deadly endermen. Because fin and mo aren’t endermen: they’re humans!!! DUN DUN DUUUUUUUUN! okay, the spoilers have ended. Yeah, thats one of the two epic plot twists. I love those when done right, and they did it right here. Did i mention grumpo the shulker? Hes the best character i hate him. He hates me. And himself. And the end. Grumpo hates everything and i can relate because i also hate everything. Thanks grumpo! (Wait, why am i thanking him randomly. Oh well). Oh yeah, also read cube kids books he good

Short Excerpt Teaser

You and Me and Us and Them

It is always night in the End. There is no sunrise. There is no sunset. There are no clocks ticking away.

But that does not mean there is no such thing as time. Or light. Ring after ring of pale yellow islands glow in the darkness, floating in the endless night. Violet trees and violet towers twist up out of the earth and into the blank sky. Trees full of fruit, towers full of rooms. White crystal rods stand like candles at the corners of the tower roofs and balconies, shining through the shadows. Sprawling, ancient, quiet cities full of these towers glitter all along the archipelago, purple and yellow like everything else in this place. Beside them float great ships with tall masts. Below them yawns a black and bottomless void.

It is a beautiful place. And it is not empty.

The islands are full of endermen, their long, slender black limbs moving over little yellow hills and little yellow valleys. Their narrow purple-and-pink eyes flash. Their thin black arms swing to the rhythm of a soft, whispering music, plotting their plots and scheming their schemes in the tall, twisted buildings older than even the idea of a clock. They watch everything. They say nothing.

Shulkers hide in boxes nestled in ships and towers. Little yellow-green slugs hiding from outsiders. Sometimes they peek out. But they snap their boxes safely shut again, like clams in their shells. The gentle thudding sound of their cubes opening and closing is the heartbeat of the End.

And on the central and largest island, enormous obsidian towers surround a small pillar of grey stone ringed with torches. A brilliant lantern gleams from the top of each tower. A flame in a silver cage, shooting beams of light down from the towers into the grass, across a little grey courtyard, and out into the black sky.

Above it all, something slowly circles. Something huge. Something with wings. Something that never tires. Round and round it goes, and its purple eyes glow like furious fire.

Fin!

The word came zinging through the shade off the shore of one of the outer islands. A huge end city loomed over most of the land: Telos. Telos sprouted out of the island highlands like something alive. Great pagodas and pavilions everywhere. White shimmers fell from the glistening end rods. Shulkers clapped in their little boxes. Leashed to Telos like a dog floated a grand purple ship. A pirate ship without an ocean to sail. Most of the end cities had ships attached to them. No one was certain why, any more than they're certain who built all those big, strange cities in the first place. Not the endermen, though they were happy to name every place after themselves. Not the thing flying in endless circles around a gate to nowhere. Not the shulkers who never came out of hiding long enough to learn anything about anything. The end ships just were, as the cities just were, as the End just was, like clouds or diamonds or Tuesdays.

Fin! Find anything good?

A skinny young enderman teleported quickly across the island, in and out of the nooks and crannies of Telos. He blinked off in one place and back on in another until he stood on the deck of the end ship, holding something in his arms. His head was handsome, black and square. His eyes were bright and hungry. His limbs were slim but strong. An enderman leaned against the mast, waiting for him. She crossed her dark arms across her thin chest.

Naw, the enderman thought loudly. The words just appeared in the other enderman's mind. Endermen had no need for mouths or ears. No need for sound. Telepathy was so much easier than talking. You just thought at somebody and they understood you.

Nothing good, Mo. Just a bunch of pearls. We've got tons of those. Ugh. You take them. They give me the creeps. I was sure the chestplates we found last week would regen by now but I guess somebody else got there first. I got some redstone ore. That's about it. You go next time. You always sniff out the good stuff.

The twin twelve-year-old endermen, brother and sister, Fin and Mo, headed down into the guts of their ship. Fin was technically three minutes older, but he didn't make a big deal out of it. Things like who was older and who wasn't smacked of rankings, of structure, of Order-and Order wasn't welcome in the End.

They'd always lived here. They couldn't remember any other place. They grew up here. It was their home. No different from any of the hundreds of endermen you'd find on any island in the archipelago. They lived on an end ship crammed with junk they'd snatched up from anywhere they could find it. Some of it was very good junk. Diamonds and emeralds, gold ore and lapis lazuli. Enchanted iron leggings, pickaxes of every kind, beetroot seeds and chorus ...